Paul Stewart graduated from Edinburgh Medical School in 1982 and trained in Edinburgh, Dallas and Birmingham with accreditation in Endocrinology/Diabetes Mellitus and General Internal Medicine. From 1992-2002 he held a MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship in Birmingham and since then has held an honorary Consultant contract with the University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation NHS Trust. In 1995 he was awarded a personal Chair in Medicine and Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians of London and in 1999 was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He is currently Dean of Medicine at the University of Birmingham.
Paul supervises an active Endocrinology research group funded currently by programme grant support from The Wellcome Trust (but also MRC, ERC, NIH and industry) that focuses on corticosteroids, specifically cortisol metabolism via 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases. His work has led to new discoveries in hypertension, obesity, inflammation, osteoporosis and ageing and is truly translational as selective 11-HSD1 inhibitors are in phase II development for patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
He has a major commitment to Clinical Medicine both within the NHS Trust and at National and International level. Clinical expertise includes the management of Pituitary and Adrenal disorders and Endocrine hypertension. Nationally, he serves or has served on Society for Endocrinology committees, Wellcome Trust Molecular and Physiological Sciences Strategy and Capital Investment committees, and is currently Chair of the MRC Clinical panel. Internationally, he has played a leadership role in the US Endocrine Society and is Secretary Treasurer for the International Society of Endocrinology.
He has over 250 original peer reviewed publications and has delivered over 150 plenary/symposium lectures to specialist societies including the RCP Linacre, Goulstonian and Simms lectures, the RCP Graham Bull prize, the Society for Endocrinology Medal Lecture, the Clinical Endocrinology Trust Medal Lecture, Sir George Pickering Medal, and the Clinical Investigator Award Plenary Lecture at The Endocrine Society.
Paul Stewart graduated from Edinburgh Medical School in 1982 and trained in Edinburgh, Dallas and Birmingham with accreditation in Endocrinology/Diabetes Mellitus and General Internal Medicine. From 1992-2002 he held a MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship in Birmingham and since then has held an honorary Consultant contract with the University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation NHS Trust. In 1995 he was awarded a personal Chair in Medicine and Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians of London and in 1999 was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He is currently Dean of Medicine at the University of Birmingham.
Paul supervises an active Endocrinology research group funded currently by programme grant support from The Wellcome Trust (but also MRC, ERC, NIH and industry) that focuses on corticosteroids, specifically cortisol metabolism via 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases. His work has led to new discoveries in hypertension, obesity, inflammation, osteoporosis and ageing and is truly translational as selective 11-HSD1 inhibitors are in phase II development for patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
He has a major commitment to Clinical Medicine both within the NHS Trust and at National and International level. Clinical expertise includes the management of Pituitary and Adrenal disorders and Endocrine hypertension. Nationally, he serves or has served on Society for Endocrinology committees, Wellcome Trust Molecular and Physiological Sciences Strategy and Capital Investment committees, and is currently Chair of the MRC Clinical panel. Internationally, he has played a leadership role in the US Endocrine Society and is Secretary Treasurer for the International Society of Endocrinology.
He has over 250 original peer reviewed publications and has delivered over 150 plenary/symposium lectures to specialist societies including the RCP Linacre, Goulstonian and Simms lectures, the RCP Graham Bull prize, the Society for Endocrinology Medal Lecture, the Clinical Endocrinology Trust Medal Lecture, Sir George Pickering Medal, and the Clinical Investigator Award Plenary Lecture at The Endocrine Society.
Paul Stewart graduated from Edinburgh Medical School in 1982 and trained in Edinburgh, Dallas and Birmingham with accreditation in Endocrinology/Diabetes Mellitus and General Internal Medicine. From 1992-2002 he held a MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship in Birmingham and since then has held an honorary Consultant contract with the University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation NHS Trust. In 1995 he was awarded a personal Chair in Medicine and Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians of London and in 1999 was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He is currently Dean of Medicine at the University of Birmingham.
Paul supervises an active Endocrinology research group funded currently by programme grant support from The Wellcome Trust (but also MRC, ERC, NIH and industry) that focuses on corticosteroids, specifically cortisol metabolism via 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases. His work has led to new discoveries in hypertension, obesity, inflammation, osteoporosis and ageing and is truly translational as selective 11-HSD1 inhibitors are in phase II development for patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
He has a major commitment to Clinical Medicine both within the NHS Trust and at National and International level. Clinical expertise includes the management of Pituitary and Adrenal disorders and Endocrine hypertension. Nationally, he serves or has served on Society for Endocrinology committees, Wellcome Trust Molecular and Physiological Sciences Strategy and Capital Investment committees, and is currently Chair of the MRC Clinical panel. Internationally, he has played a leadership role in the US Endocrine Society and is Secretary Treasurer for the International Society of Endocrinology.
He has over 250 original peer reviewed publications and has delivered over 150 plenary/symposium lectures to specialist societies including the RCP Linacre, Goulstonian and Simms lectures, the RCP Graham Bull prize, the Society for Endocrinology Medal Lecture, the Clinical Endocrinology Trust Medal Lecture, Sir George Pickering Medal, and the Clinical Investigator Award Plenary Lecture at The Endocrine Society.
Paul Stewart graduated from Edinburgh Medical School in 1982 and trained in Edinburgh, Dallas and Birmingham with accreditation in Endocrinology/Diabetes Mellitus and General Internal Medicine. From 1992-2002 he held a MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship in Birmingham and since then has held an honorary Consultant contract with the University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation NHS Trust. In 1995 he was awarded a personal Chair in Medicine and Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians of London and in 1999 was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He is currently Dean of Medicine at the University of Birmingham.
Paul supervises an active Endocrinology research group funded currently by programme grant support from The Wellcome Trust (but also MRC, ERC, NIH and industry) that focuses on corticosteroids, specifically cortisol metabolism via 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases. His work has led to new discoveries in hypertension, obesity, inflammation, osteoporosis and ageing and is truly translational as selective 11-HSD1 inhibitors are in phase II development for patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
He has a major commitment to Clinical Medicine both within the NHS Trust and at National and International level. Clinical expertise includes the management of Pituitary and Adrenal disorders and Endocrine hypertension. Nationally, he serves or has served on Society for Endocrinology committees, Wellcome Trust Molecular and Physiological Sciences Strategy and Capital Investment committees, and is currently Chair of the MRC Clinical panel. Internationally, he has played a leadership role in the US Endocrine Society and is Secretary Treasurer for the International Society of Endocrinology.
He has over 250 original peer reviewed publications and has delivered over 150 plenary/symposium lectures to specialist societies including the RCP Linacre, Goulstonian and Simms lectures, the RCP Graham Bull prize, the Society for Endocrinology Medal Lecture, the Clinical Endocrinology Trust Medal Lecture, Sir George Pickering Medal, and the Clinical Investigator Award Plenary Lecture at The Endocrine Society.
Paul Stewart graduated from Edinburgh Medical School in 1982 and trained in Edinburgh, Dallas and Birmingham with accreditation in Endocrinology/Diabetes Mellitus and General Internal Medicine. From 1992-2002 he held a MRC Senior Clinical Fellowship in Birmingham and since then has held an honorary Consultant contract with the University Hospitals Birmingham Foundation NHS Trust. In 1995 he was awarded a personal Chair in Medicine and Fellowship of the Royal College of Physicians of London and in 1999 was elected as a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He is currently Dean of Medicine at the University of Birmingham.
Paul supervises an active Endocrinology research group funded currently by programme grant support from The Wellcome Trust (but also MRC, ERC, NIH and industry) that focuses on corticosteroids, specifically cortisol metabolism via 11-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases. His work has led to new discoveries in hypertension, obesity, inflammation, osteoporosis and ageing and is truly translational as selective 11-HSD1 inhibitors are in phase II development for patients with Metabolic Syndrome.
He has a major commitment to Clinical Medicine both within the NHS Trust and at National and International level. Clinical expertise includes the management of Pituitary and Adrenal disorders and Endocrine hypertension. Nationally, he serves or has served on Society for Endocrinology committees, Wellcome Trust Molecular and Physiological Sciences Strategy and Capital Investment committees, and is currently Chair of the MRC Clinical panel. Internationally, he has played a leadership role in the US Endocrine Society and is Secretary Treasurer for the International Society of Endocrinology.
He has over 250 original peer reviewed publications and has delivered over 150 plenary/symposium lectures to specialist societies including the RCP Linacre, Goulstonian and Simms lectures, the RCP Graham Bull prize, the Society for Endocrinology Medal Lecture, the Clinical Endocrinology Trust Medal Lecture, Sir George Pickering Medal, and the Clinical Investigator Award Plenary Lecture at The Endocrine Society.
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